America at war! (1941–) – Part 4

Catholic political aims denied

Big RAF raid rips Duisburg transport hub

Night raiders also stab at Hamburg


Dutch child foils Nazis with 2 words

Navy gives names of damaged ships

Reds hail results of Tehran parley

Poll: Russia to join war on Japs, public believes

Only 1 in 4 expects neutrality to stand
By George Gallup, Director, American Institute of Public Opinion

277,000 Japs killed; cost 21,000 Yanks

Enemy still has 4 million soldiers

Gallup Poll enters vote investigation

Editorial: Fired but not answered

Editorial: Common ground

Editorial: To preserve Christmas

Editorial: Conscription in Canada

Heath: Government’s IOUs (safe ones) fill old age till

By S. Burton Heath

Ferguson: European outlook

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson

Background of news –
An altered Townsend Plan

By Bertram Benedict

Fatigue causes drop in German production despite Nazi decrees

Workers to get paid only for ‘useful’ labor; weak, sick told to hang on
By Nat A. Barrows

Fifth of a series

Stockholm, Sweden –
Even if they drop in their tracks from ailments, fatigue or simply lack of strength, German factory workers must somehow manage to turn out their quota of production for the Nazis’ badly-battered war machine.

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s appeal for more ammunition from America has been matched by a Nazi decree, inside Germany, demanding both increased production and decreased use of raw materials. It is a flat edict with no “ifs” or “buts” commanding all workers to intensify their output capacity.

The new factory schedule alters the wage scale so that the worker gets paid only for “useful work accomplished” and expressly warns the weak and sick that they must hang on, somehow, and do what they can.

This decree from Labor Minister Fritz Sauckel explains the seriou8s difficulties with which the Nazi war industry is confronted today, but it does not mean that Nazi industry is already falling apart. Production has been hit seriously by concentrated bombings against such priority targets as synthetic oil and airplane factories, yet that fabulous group of five men behind the Speer Ministry is still able to keep factory wheels geared to war requirements – at least for the moment.

Reach saturation point

It is a question how much longer Armaments and War Production Minister Albert Speer, and his four all-powerful colleagues on the Speer Ministry’s governing board, can keep up production needs. The saturation point in Nazi industry definitely has been reached. Heavy industry just beyond the Western Front is taking terrific punishment. And the number of available workers decreases after every bomb raid.

The Nazis anticipated some of these problems long ago, as a briefcase alongside the body of that genius, Fritz Todt (killed in an airplane crash in February 1942) gave the outline for developing inside Germany an industrial empire without contrast in history. Todt told the Germans how to achieve maximum efficiency for industrial self-government with a minimum of bureaucracy and red tape.

Implementing Todt’s ideas, the Germans have developed a five-man group with unprecedented control over industry. This group today runs, directly or indirectly, every German factory.

Machines standardized

Long ago, it standardized machines and parts to make them completely interchangeable; long ago, it developed a plan for labor mobility so that factory workers could be moved quickly from one district to another; long ago it fixed working conditions so rigidly that employees were enslaved to benches and machines.

But the genius of Todt, and the fantastic power of the Speer Ministry warlords, could not overcome human fatigue. They have increased the number of rest periods and they have tried various psychological tricks, but industrial efficiency has continued to drop nonetheless.

Longer working hours and extreme simplification of methods have not shown satisfactory compensations. Efficiency has continued to drop.

Causes listed

The basic causes for the declining efficiency are such that the Nazis are able to do little about them:

  • Drained-up reserves of foreign workers
  • Reduced incentive for good work and absence of competition
  • The number of unskilled women employed under the compulsory labor order
  • Longer working hours and the heavy strain from worry, bomber raids, fatigue and lack of recreation.

The Speer Ministry, ruling industry with absolute dictatorial powers has dispersed factories fat and wide throughout Germany, many of them underground, safe from even Allied earthquake bombs. What they could not do, what they cannot do, is to make machines run without human strength behind them.

That factor looms directly behind Germany’s declining industrial output. Manpower can be stretched just so far – and not one inch more.

Fliers massacre Nazi elite troops

Crack division hit hard, officer reveals
By Edward V. Roberts, United Press staff writer

Box-like yakskin boat looks frail as it rides down river in Tibet

Traveler to Lhasa passes monastery terraced villages along Brahmaputra
By A. T. Steele

Germans continue attack in Italy

‘Extremely heavy’ fighting near Bologna

Stokes: Congress’ chance

By Thomas L. Stokes

Maj. Williams: Russia’s position

By Maj. Al Williams